[go: up one dir, main page]

US3208382A - Skeet load - Google Patents

Skeet load Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3208382A
US3208382A US305972A US30597263A US3208382A US 3208382 A US3208382 A US 3208382A US 305972 A US305972 A US 305972A US 30597263 A US30597263 A US 30597263A US 3208382 A US3208382 A US 3208382A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
shot
closure
transverse
shotshell
container
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US305972A
Inventor
Donald S Foote
Justin H Whipple
Benjamin K Daubenspeck
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Remington Arms Co LLC
Original Assignee
Remington Arms Co LLC
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Remington Arms Co LLC filed Critical Remington Arms Co LLC
Priority to US305972A priority Critical patent/US3208382A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3208382A publication Critical patent/US3208382A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F42AMMUNITION; BLASTING
    • F42BEXPLOSIVE CHARGES, e.g. FOR BLASTING, FIREWORKS, AMMUNITION
    • F42B7/00Shotgun ammunition
    • F42B7/02Cartridges, i.e. cases with propellant charge and missile
    • F42B7/04Cartridges, i.e. cases with propellant charge and missile of pellet type

Definitions

  • IPresent Skeet loads contain 11/8 ounces of #9 lead shot (658 pellets). iPatterns tired yfrom a skeet barrel at 25 yards (skeet range) run about 65-70% (428 to 460 pellets) in a 30" diameter circle. With the present invention it is possible to use one ounce of steel shot (744 pellets) and achieve an 80% pattern at 25 pards (592 pellets) in a 30 diameter circle. This improved skeet load, therefore, would have the following advantages over present loads:
  • the danger range should be less for steel shot; (5) a more economical shell due to the diiierential in price between l ounce of steel shot at about $.06 per pound and 1% ounces of lead shot at ⁇ about $.12 per pound; (6) a non-lead shot is non-toxic to fowl, who sometimes kbecome poisoned by eating lead shot pellets.
  • FIGURE 1 shows an elevation view of a shotshell utilizing the present invention.
  • FIGURE 2 is an elevation view showing a modied version ofthe invention.
  • FIGURE 1 shows a shotgun cartridge 10 in which the shotshell body 12 is preferably rnade of plastic 9 although paper, or any other suitable material can be used.
  • the shotshell body 12 is preferably rnade of plastic 9 although paper, or any other suitable material can be used.
  • the lower end of the body 112 is Ia head 14 in which a conventional priming assembly 16 is positioned.
  • the open-ended forward or mouth end 18 of the body is closed off by a closure 20 which is integral with the body 12 and crimped so as to provide the closure means.
  • a closure 20 which is integral with the body 12 and crimped so as to provide the closure means.
  • a conventional base wad 22 located in the lower end of the body adjacent to the head 14 is a conventional base wad 22 in which priming assembly 16 is positioned so tha-t the primer is in direct communication with a propellant explosive means 24, preferably powder.
  • a shot liner 26 Located adjacent the propellant means is a shot liner 26, .preferably made of plastic.
  • the shot liner 26 is made in the form of an integrally molded plastic cup which has a transverse wall portion 2S and a cylindrical portion 30 which extends forwardly from the transverse wall.
  • the front end of the cylindrical portion 30 is inwardly inclined at 32 for la purpose to be described later.
  • Cylindrical skirt means 34 extend rearwardly from transverse wall 28 and functions as a gas seal to prevent explosive gas from escaping between the cylindrical portion 30 and the body 10.
  • a plurality of steel shot pellets 3o are positioned within the shot 'liner 26 and rest on the transverse wall 28.
  • the steel shot being substantially harder and having a substantially higher melting point than the lead shot, are not atected by the shock and heat of the propellant explosion in the same manner as the lead shot. Lt has been found that the transverse wa'll portion 28 of the shot liner is sufHcient to keep the steel shot and propellant separated in order to prevent the direct force of the explosion from deforming the shot pellets.
  • the wall thickness of a shot liner made of high density 'linear polyethylene plastic material must be at least .050" in lorder to prevent the steel shot from scratching the gun barrel.
  • the ygeneral classification of polyethylenes based on density has become standard in the industry. ILowdensity resins are in the range of 0.910 to 0.925 g./cu. cm.; medium-density resins from 0.926 to 0.940 g./cu. cm.; and high-density resins from 0.941 to 0.965 g./cu. cm. If a low density nonlinear polyethylene plastic material were to be considered, the wall thickness requirenient would increase to about .060 in order to obtain safe performance.
  • Polyolefins are the normally solid products of high molecular weight resulting from the polymerization of olefins, usually either ethylene or propylene (singly or in admixture) under suitably selected pressure and temperature conditions, with or without the use of catalysts.
  • the mouth of the liner is chamfered, as shown at 32. Due to shot compression during ring, there is no tendency for shot to penetrate the liner in the first 1A of the mouth end. The reduction in wall thickness at this point, due to a chamfer, therefore would not be harmful.
  • FIGURE 2 A modification utilizing another form of the invention is shown in FIGURE 2.
  • the shotshell body 33 has a head 50 at one end which can be either connected in a conventional manner, molded integral with the body or releasably connected as shown by threaded means 42.
  • Priming assembly i4 is positioned in the head 40 and flange portion 46 of body 38.
  • a shot container 48 having a transverse wall portion 50 and a gas sealing skirt means SZ at the lower end thereof is placed within said body adjacent to propellant powder 54.
  • Container 43 also includes a heavy tubular wall portion 56 extending upwardly from transverse wall S0, the heavy wall portion 56 having an elongated peripheral recess 58 at its forward end 60 thus forming an open area between the forward end 60 of the shot container 4S and the forward end 62 of the shotshell body 64.
  • the lower tubular wall portion 66 of a closure-container 68 is Into this open area.
  • the closure-container 68 is in the form of an inverted cup whose lower, necked-down end portion 66 telescopes into the open area formed by the shot container and the shotshell body and which is held there either by a friction fit or by any other well known means such as a detent, a circular bead, etc.
  • Closure-container 68 also includes a forward transverse closure member 70 and a slit 72 which extends longitudinally through the closure-container.
  • An unslit portion 74 acts as a hinge means which will be explained below.
  • a plurality of steel shot pellets 76 are enclosed within the shot container and container-closure so that firing, the shot container and closure-container move together as a unit until the unit leaves the gun barrel (not shown), after which the container-closure opens up like a clam at its slit and hinges on the unslit hinge portion 74, thus releasing the shot pellets.
  • This aspect of the shotshell is not part of the present invention and is mentioned here only to provide the necessary background information.
  • the same conditions of plastic thickness must be present.
  • at least about .050 of high density linear polyethylene plastic material or .060 of non-linear polyethylene must be provided if the steel shot is not to push through the plastic and scour or scratch the gun barrel.
  • this thickness of plastic can be the combined thickness of the upper portion 60 of the shot container 48 and the lower portion 66 of the closurecontainer 68.
  • a shotgun cartridge comprising a shotshell body with a head at one end and an open mouth at the opposite end, propellant explosive means positioned in said body, priming means in the head cooperating with and in communication with said propellant explosive means, a closure means slidably mounted at the mouth end of the body and adapted to be explosively projected therefrom, said closure means comprising an inverted cup of polyethylene plastic material, said cup having a transverse closure member and a rearwardly-extending tubular wall portion, slit means in said transverse closure member connecting with slit means said closure tubular wall portion, an integrally molded shot container made of polyethylene plastic material positioned within said body and cooperating with said inverted closure cup to form a chamber therebetween, said shot container comprising an elongated tubular wall portion and an integral transverse wall positioned immediately adjacent to said propellant explosive means, gas sealing means extending rearwardly from said transverse wall, a plurality of steel shot pellets confined within said chamber, said chamber being defined by said shot container transverse wall at the rear
  • closure tubular wall portion includes an end portion which overlaps and abuts a cooperating end portion of said shot liner tubular wall portion, said cooperating end portions of said closure tubular wall portion and said shot liner tubular wall portion separating said steel shot from said shotshell body by a minimum of about 0.060 thickness of plastic.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Containers And Packaging Bodies Having A Special Means To Remove Contents (AREA)

Description

Sept. 28, 1965 D. s. FooTE ETAL SKEE'I LOAD Filed Sept. Z5, 1963 llllllliillllllnllnl United States Patent O 3,208,332 SKEET LOAD Donald S. Foote, Greens Farms, `lnstin H. Whipple, Milford, and Benjamin K. Danbenspeck, Stratford, Conn., assignors to Remington Arms Company, inc., Bridgeport, Conn., a corporation of Delaware Filed Sept. 3, 1963, Ser. No. 305,972 2 Claims. (Cl. MP2- 42) This invention relates in general to shotgun cartridges. More specifically, it refers to a new and improved shotshell load `utilizing steel shot which is especially useful as a skeet target load.
It is signiiic-ant that although the disadvantages and shortcomings of using lead shot pellets have been appreciated yby the ammunition industry for some time, steel shot pellets are not commercially available up to the present time. The major reason for this, of course, is that steel shot, being much harder and -much more a-brasive than lead shot, is a constant and serious source of gun barrel wear and scratching. Up to the present time, the use of steel shot has been too destructive of gun barre-ls for other than experimental use.
Heretofore, work in the field on the substitution of steel shot for lead has resulted in shotshell loads which, due to the relatively light weight and relatively high hardness of steel shot `as compared to lead, have been Vadmittedly inferior. It is believed that this invention is the rst application which utilizes the physical characteristics of steel shot to make a specic shotshell load which in its intended use is cle-arly superior to the equivalent lead shot load.
IPresent Skeet loads contain 11/8 ounces of #9 lead shot (658 pellets). iPatterns tired yfrom a skeet barrel at 25 yards (skeet range) run about 65-70% (428 to 460 pellets) in a 30" diameter circle. With the present invention it is possible to use one ounce of steel shot (744 pellets) and achieve an 80% pattern at 25 pards (592 pellets) in a 30 diameter circle. This improved skeet load, therefore, would have the following advantages over present loads:
1) No barrel leading or scoring; (2) less recoil due to 1A ounce less shot weight and decrease of weight of wad column since ller wad can be eliminated; (3) far greater pattern density-over 125 more pellets in a 30" diameter circle at normal skeet range (25 yards); (4) a safer load-tests `at 40 yards have shown that steel shot pellets of this size possess less energy than #9 lead shot. Therefore, the danger range should be less for steel shot; (5) a more economical shell due to the diiierential in price between l ounce of steel shot at about $.06 per pound and 1% ounces of lead shot at `about $.12 per pound; (6) a non-lead shot is non-toxic to fowl, who sometimes kbecome poisoned by eating lead shot pellets.
The above listed advantages of steel shot loads lover the present lead shot loads are real and highly desirable. It mus-t be stated however, that due to the range limitations of steel shot, the advantage of greater pattern density disappears as the effective range increases over 25 yards. The other advantages remain however.
It is an object of this invention to provide an improved shotshell in which steel shot pellets are eiciently and etfectively utilized.
It is a further yobject of this invention to provide an improved skeet load designed to give improved patttern density at a range of about 25 yards.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a more economical and safer shotshell load than the present lead shot shotsfhells.
Other objects and advantages will be apparent from iidz Patented Sept. 28, 1965 ICC the following description and accompanying drawing in which:
FIGURE 1 shows an elevation view of a shotshell utilizing the present invention.
FIGURE 2 is an elevation view showing a modied version ofthe invention.
Referring to the drawing, FIGURE 1 shows a shotgun cartridge 10 in which the shotshell body 12 is preferably rnade of plastic 9 although paper, or any other suitable material can be used. -At the lower end of the body 112 is Ia head 14 in which a conventional priming assembly 16 is positioned. The open-ended forward or mouth end 18 of the body is closed off by a closure 20 which is integral with the body 12 and crimped so as to provide the closure means.v Obviously other types of closures may be pr-ovided.
'Located in the lower end of the body adjacent to the head 14 is a conventional base wad 22 in which priming assembly 16 is positioned so tha-t the primer is in direct communication with a propellant explosive means 24, preferably powder. Immediately adjacent the propellant means is a shot liner 26, .preferably made of plastic.
The shot liner 26 is made in the form of an integrally molded plastic cup which has a transverse wall portion 2S and a cylindrical portion 30 which extends forwardly from the transverse wall. The front end of the cylindrical portion 30 is inwardly inclined at 32 for la purpose to be described later. Cylindrical skirt means 34 extend rearwardly from transverse wall 28 and functions as a gas seal to prevent explosive gas from escaping between the cylindrical portion 30 and the body 10. A plurality of steel shot pellets 3o are positioned within the shot 'liner 26 and rest on the transverse wall 28.
When lead shot is used, it is necessary to insert one or more tiller wads between the shot and the propellant means in order to protect the lower layers of soft lead shot from being mechanically deformed by the shock caused by `the tiring of the shell. `In addition, the heat and explosive gas generated by the ignition of the propellant tend to melt the l-ower layers of lead shot and cause barrel leading. Obviously, both the mechanical deformation :and the lbarrel leading are objectionable and efforts are constantly being made to decrease or eliminate |both of these objectionable results.
In the present invention, the steel shot, being substantially harder and having a substantially higher melting point than the lead shot, are not atected by the shock and heat of the propellant explosion in the same manner as the lead shot. Lt has been found that the transverse wa'll portion 28 of the shot liner is sufHcient to keep the steel shot and propellant separated in order to prevent the direct force of the explosion from deforming the shot pellets.
After various penetration tests, it was found that the wall thickness of a shot liner made of high density 'linear polyethylene plastic material must be at least .050" in lorder to prevent the steel shot from scratching the gun barrel. The ygeneral classification of polyethylenes based on density has become standard in the industry. ILowdensity resins are in the range of 0.910 to 0.925 g./cu. cm.; medium-density resins from 0.926 to 0.940 g./cu. cm.; and high-density resins from 0.941 to 0.965 g./cu. cm. If a low density nonlinear polyethylene plastic material were to be considered, the wall thickness requirenient would increase to about .060 in order to obtain safe performance. Conversely, la matefigu harder than linear polyethylene could function with thinner wal'l thicknesses, but `such material must not exhibit brittleness such as found in polystyrene liners. Obviously, lother forms of llexible polyolenic plastic materials are available and acceptable in addition to polyethylene.
accenna Polyolefins are the normally solid products of high molecular weight resulting from the polymerization of olefins, usually either ethylene or propylene (singly or in admixture) under suitably selected pressure and temperature conditions, with or without the use of catalysts.
In order to prevent any tendency of a shot pellet to ride on the lip of a liner, the mouth of the liner is chamfered, as shown at 32. Due to shot compression during ring, there is no tendency for shot to penetrate the liner in the first 1A of the mouth end. The reduction in wall thickness at this point, due to a chamfer, therefore would not be harmful.
A modification utilizing another form of the invention is shown in FIGURE 2. In this modification, the shotshell body 33 has a head 50 at one end which can be either connected in a conventional manner, molded integral with the body or releasably connected as shown by threaded means 42. Priming assembly i4 is positioned in the head 40 and flange portion 46 of body 38.
As can be seen in FIGURE 2, a shot container 48 having a transverse wall portion 50 and a gas sealing skirt means SZ at the lower end thereof is placed within said body adjacent to propellant powder 54. Container 43 also includes a heavy tubular wall portion 56 extending upwardly from transverse wall S0, the heavy wall portion 56 having an elongated peripheral recess 58 at its forward end 60 thus forming an open area between the forward end 60 of the shot container 4S and the forward end 62 of the shotshell body 64. Into this open area is inserted the lower tubular wall portion 66 of a closure-container 68. The closure-container 68 is in the form of an inverted cup whose lower, necked-down end portion 66 telescopes into the open area formed by the shot container and the shotshell body and which is held there either by a friction fit or by any other well known means such as a detent, a circular bead, etc.
Closure-container 68 also includes a forward transverse closure member 70 and a slit 72 which extends longitudinally through the closure-container. An unslit portion 74 acts as a hinge means which will be explained below. A plurality of steel shot pellets 76 are enclosed within the shot container and container-closure so that firing, the shot container and closure-container move together as a unit until the unit leaves the gun barrel (not shown), after which the container-closure opens up like a clam at its slit and hinges on the unslit hinge portion 74, thus releasing the shot pellets. This aspect of the shotshell, however, is not part of the present invention and is mentioned here only to provide the necessary background information.
In order for the unit comprised of the shot container and the container-closure to effectively prevent the steel shot pellets from scratching the gun barrel, the same conditions of plastic thickness must be present. Thus, at least about .050 of high density linear polyethylene plastic material or .060 of non-linear polyethylene must be provided if the steel shot is not to push through the plastic and scour or scratch the gun barrel. However, it must be appreciated that this thickness of plastic can be the combined thickness of the upper portion 60 of the shot container 48 and the lower portion 66 of the closurecontainer 68.
It is believed that the above describes the first effective and practical shotshell using steel shot. As explained above, the utility of such a combination for a skeet load is apparent.
It is to be understood that the figures are not drawn to scale and that relative dimensions of the various elements, if they are deemed patentably important, will be found in the specification and not to be derived by scaling the drawings.
What is claimed is:
1l. A shotgun cartridge comprising a shotshell body with a head at one end and an open mouth at the opposite end, propellant explosive means positioned in said body, priming means in the head cooperating with and in communication with said propellant explosive means, a closure means slidably mounted at the mouth end of the body and adapted to be explosively projected therefrom, said closure means comprising an inverted cup of polyethylene plastic material, said cup having a transverse closure member and a rearwardly-extending tubular wall portion, slit means in said transverse closure member connecting with slit means said closure tubular wall portion, an integrally molded shot container made of polyethylene plastic material positioned within said body and cooperating with said inverted closure cup to form a chamber therebetween, said shot container comprising an elongated tubular wall portion and an integral transverse wall positioned immediately adjacent to said propellant explosive means, gas sealing means extending rearwardly from said transverse wall, a plurality of steel shot pellets confined within said chamber, said chamber being defined by said shot container transverse wall at the rear, said transverse closure member at the front and by a minimum of about 0.060" thickness of plastic at the sides so that a minimum of 0.060" plastic is positioned between the steel shot and the shotshell body thus effectively preventing the steel shot from coming in contact with the shotshell body and the gun barrel while the shot is being explosively projected therethrough.
2. A shotgun cartridge as recited in claim l wherein said closure tubular wall portion includes an end portion which overlaps and abuts a cooperating end portion of said shot liner tubular wall portion, said cooperating end portions of said closure tubular wall portion and said shot liner tubular wall portion separating said steel shot from said shotshell body by a minimum of about 0.060 thickness of plastic.
References Cited by the Examiner UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,066,525 7/ 13 Pedersen 102-42 1,575,716 3/26 Pavek 102--42 3,055,301 9/62 Miller et al 102-42 3,009,958 8/ 63 Daubenspeck et al 102-42 3,121,391 2/64 Young 10b-42 FOREIGN PATENTS 1,163,832 5/58 France. 1,186,659 2/59 France.
OTHER REFERENCES smokeless Shotgun Powders, by Wallace I-I. Coxe, published by E. I. du Pont Co., Inc., Wilmington, Delaware, 1933, pp. 60-62 required.
SAMUEL FEINBERG, Primary Examined BENJAMIN A. BORCHELT, Examiner.

Claims (1)

1. A SHOTGUN CARTRIDGE COMPRISING A SHOTSHELL BODY WITH A HEAD AT ONE END AND AN OPEN MOUTH AT THE OPPOSITE END, PROPELLANT EXPLOSIVE MEANS POSITIONED IN SAID BODY, PRIMING MEANS IN THE HEAD COOPERATING WITH AND IN COMMUNICATION WITH SAID PROPELLANT EXPLOSIVE MEANS, A CLOSURE MEANS SLIDABLY MOUNTED AT THE MOUTH END OF THE BODY AND ADAPTED TO BE EXPLOSIVELY PROJECTED THEREFROM, SAID CLOSURE MEANS COMPRISING AN INVERTED CUP OF POLYETHLENE PLASTIC MATERIAL, SAID CUP HAVING A TRANSVERSE CLOSURE MEMBER AND A REAWARDLY-EXTENDING TUBULAR WALL PORTION, SLIT MEANS IN SAID TRANSVERSE CLOSURE MEMBER CONNECTING WITH SLIT MEANS SAID CLOSURE TUBULAR WALL PORTION, AN INTEGRALLY MOLDED SHOT CONTAINER MADE OF POLYETHYLENE PLASTIC MATERIAL POSITIONED WITH SAID BODY AND COOPERATING WITH SAID INVERTED CLOSURE CUP TO FORM A CHAMBER THEREBETWEEN, SAID SHOT CONTAINER COMPRISING AN ELONGATED TUBULAR WALL PORTION AND AN INTEGRAL TRANSVERSE WALL POSITIONED IMMEDIATELY ADJACENT TO SAID PROPELLANT EXPLOSIVE MEANS, GAS SEALING MEANS EXTENDING REAWARDLY FROM SAID TRANSVERSE WALL, A PLURALITY OF STELL SHOT PELLETS CONFINED WITHIN SAID CHAMBER, SAID CHAMBER BEING DEFINED BY SAID SHOT CONTAINER TRANSVERSE WALL AT THE REAR, SAID TRANSVERSE CLOSURE MEMBER AT THE FRONT AND BY A MINIUMUM OF ABOUT 0.066" THICKNESS OF PLASTIC AT THE SIDES SO THAT A MINIUMUM OF 0.060" PLASTIC IS POSITIONED BETWEEN THE STEEL SHOT AND THE SHOTSHELL BODY THUS EFFECTIVELY PREVENTING THE STEEL SHOT FROM COMING IN CONTACT WITH THE SHOTSHELL BODY AND THE GUN BARREL WHILE THE SHOT IS BEING EXPLOSIVELY PROJECTED THERETHROUGH.
US305972A 1963-09-03 1963-09-03 Skeet load Expired - Lifetime US3208382A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US305972A US3208382A (en) 1963-09-03 1963-09-03 Skeet load

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US305972A US3208382A (en) 1963-09-03 1963-09-03 Skeet load

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3208382A true US3208382A (en) 1965-09-28

Family

ID=23183171

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US305972A Expired - Lifetime US3208382A (en) 1963-09-03 1963-09-03 Skeet load

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3208382A (en)

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3401588A (en) * 1966-08-11 1968-09-17 Ole N. Olson Shot container for cartridges and method of loading
US3568603A (en) * 1969-05-07 1971-03-09 Olin Mathieson Air rifle shot shell
US3721194A (en) * 1970-04-13 1973-03-20 C Weston Diversifying the shooting characteristics of shotguns
US3835783A (en) * 1972-12-04 1974-09-17 Remington Arms Co Inc Shot container wad for hard shot
US3881418A (en) * 1972-11-24 1975-05-06 Nippon Oils & Fats Co Ltd Cartridge for shotgun
US3952659A (en) * 1974-06-20 1976-04-27 Olin Corporation Flattened spherical shot
US4167904A (en) * 1977-09-15 1979-09-18 Ferri Bernard L Shot compressor devices and method therefor
US4676170A (en) * 1984-07-16 1987-06-30 Non-Toxic Components, Inc. One-piece wad structure adapted for reloading of hard shot
US4773329A (en) * 1985-11-25 1988-09-27 Olin Corporation Composite shot wad structure for steel and other hard shot
US4815388A (en) * 1986-11-11 1989-03-28 Olin Corporation Shot charge and wad structure for a combat shotgun
US5171934A (en) * 1990-12-24 1992-12-15 Larry Moore Shortened shotshell with double-cupped wadding
US6257147B1 (en) * 1999-05-03 2001-07-10 Robert Bruce Davies Frangible shotshell
US8622000B2 (en) 2011-03-16 2014-01-07 Olin Corporation Rounded cubic shot and shotshells loaded with rounded cubic shot
USD773008S1 (en) * 2010-10-20 2016-11-29 Olin Corporation Shot

Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1066525A (en) * 1912-10-21 1913-07-08 John D Pedersen Cartridge.
US1575716A (en) * 1925-05-18 1926-03-09 William J Pavek Shotgun cartridge
FR1163832A (en) * 1956-05-09 1958-10-01 Improvement of cartridges loaded with lead shot
FR1186659A (en) * 1957-11-22 1959-08-31 Rhone Alpes Soc Ind Wad for firearms ammunition
US3009958A (en) * 1957-06-06 1961-11-21 Polaroid Corp Hydroquinonyl derivatives and their synthesis
US3055301A (en) * 1961-03-13 1962-09-25 Olin Mathieson Ammunition
US3121391A (en) * 1962-12-20 1964-02-18 Wendell M Young Shot shell

Patent Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1066525A (en) * 1912-10-21 1913-07-08 John D Pedersen Cartridge.
US1575716A (en) * 1925-05-18 1926-03-09 William J Pavek Shotgun cartridge
FR1163832A (en) * 1956-05-09 1958-10-01 Improvement of cartridges loaded with lead shot
US3009958A (en) * 1957-06-06 1961-11-21 Polaroid Corp Hydroquinonyl derivatives and their synthesis
FR1186659A (en) * 1957-11-22 1959-08-31 Rhone Alpes Soc Ind Wad for firearms ammunition
US3055301A (en) * 1961-03-13 1962-09-25 Olin Mathieson Ammunition
US3121391A (en) * 1962-12-20 1964-02-18 Wendell M Young Shot shell

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3401588A (en) * 1966-08-11 1968-09-17 Ole N. Olson Shot container for cartridges and method of loading
US3568603A (en) * 1969-05-07 1971-03-09 Olin Mathieson Air rifle shot shell
US3721194A (en) * 1970-04-13 1973-03-20 C Weston Diversifying the shooting characteristics of shotguns
US3881418A (en) * 1972-11-24 1975-05-06 Nippon Oils & Fats Co Ltd Cartridge for shotgun
US3835783A (en) * 1972-12-04 1974-09-17 Remington Arms Co Inc Shot container wad for hard shot
US3952659A (en) * 1974-06-20 1976-04-27 Olin Corporation Flattened spherical shot
US4167904A (en) * 1977-09-15 1979-09-18 Ferri Bernard L Shot compressor devices and method therefor
US4676170A (en) * 1984-07-16 1987-06-30 Non-Toxic Components, Inc. One-piece wad structure adapted for reloading of hard shot
US4773329A (en) * 1985-11-25 1988-09-27 Olin Corporation Composite shot wad structure for steel and other hard shot
US4815388A (en) * 1986-11-11 1989-03-28 Olin Corporation Shot charge and wad structure for a combat shotgun
US5171934A (en) * 1990-12-24 1992-12-15 Larry Moore Shortened shotshell with double-cupped wadding
US6257147B1 (en) * 1999-05-03 2001-07-10 Robert Bruce Davies Frangible shotshell
USD773008S1 (en) * 2010-10-20 2016-11-29 Olin Corporation Shot
US8622000B2 (en) 2011-03-16 2014-01-07 Olin Corporation Rounded cubic shot and shotshells loaded with rounded cubic shot

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3208382A (en) Skeet load
US5033386A (en) Composite cartridge for high velocity rifles and the like
US8276519B2 (en) Wad-less cartridges and method of manufacturing the same
US10436560B2 (en) Polymer projectile having an integrated driving band
US5160805A (en) Projectile
US3609904A (en) Extractable plastic cartridge
US7299735B2 (en) Device for the disruption of explosive ordnance
EP0170745B1 (en) A cartridge for small arms
US3246603A (en) Shotgun cartridge
US8573127B2 (en) Pressure-relief system for gun fired cannon cartridges
US3283720A (en) Molded plastic shotshell
US3289586A (en) Wad column
CA2651904C (en) Non-lethal munitions having densified materials
US4216722A (en) Exploding bullet
US3233546A (en) Shotshell design
US10527394B2 (en) Kinetic and/or incapacitating projectile having high energy absorption
JPH0131120B2 (en)
US4220090A (en) Shot wad column
US10247529B2 (en) Reactive shot shell for breaching barriers
NO136060B (en)
US3215076A (en) Shotshell
TR201811153T4 (en) A cartridge cartridge.
US5767438A (en) Frangible ammunition
US3724376A (en) Expendable case shotshell
US3786753A (en) Wad column for shotshells